Hammers confirm Retain List
WHUFC.com
West Ham United have issued their Retain List of players at the end of the
2014/15 season.
The Hammers have confirmed that senior professionals Carlton Cole, Guy
Demel, Jussi Jaaskelainen and Nene will all leave the Club at the end of
their contracts on 30 June.
Young professionals Kieran Bywater, Sean Maguire, Paul McCallum and Dan
Potts will also depart the Boleyn Ground after not being offered new
contracts.
Scholars Jerry Amoo and Kieran Bailey have been released, while Taylor
Tombides will also be moving on.
Meanwhile, youngsters Kyle Knoyle, Djair Parfitt-Williams and Alex Pike have
agreed their first professional deals with the Club and will sign contracts
from 1 July.
The Club would like to thank all the departing players for their efforts and
wish them well in their future careers
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Nene thanks Hammers fans
WHUFC.com
Nene has thanked the West Ham United fans for the support shown to him
during his four months at the Boleyn Ground.
The Brazilian forward will be leaving the Club at the end of his contract on
30 June as he pursues top-flight football elsewhere.
He made eight Barclays Premier League appearances in claret and blue, and
although he admits he hoped for more opportunities, he will leave London
with fond memories.
Writing on his official Instagram account, the 33-year-old said: "My goal is
to play for at least three more seasons at the top level and for that reason
I need to go to another club.
"I thank the fans for their permanent support and wish the best success to
my teammates and West Ham United."
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Cole says farewell
WHUFC.com
Carlton Cole has made 293 appearances for West Ham United over the past nine
seasons, scoring 68 goals. The centre forward, who scored on his debut
against Charlton Athletic in August 2006 and the opening goal in the 2012
Championship Play-Off final victory over Blackpool at Wembley, has played
seven times for England during his time as a Hammer. Here, the 31-year-old
says farewell to the Hammers in his own words…
Hello everyone,
I've been at West Ham United for quite a long time and I've enjoyed myself
here, with all the ups and downs, the heartaches and everything that came
along with it.
At the same time, I've grown from being a boy to a man here and everybody
has treated me like a part of the family.
It is heart-warming to know that I have got such support and that I have
done my fair share for the Club and been part of the history as well, which
is very important for me.
I'm very happy to have been a part of it and, wherever my future may lie,
West Ham will always have a special place in my heart.
It means a lot to me to have been at West Ham for so long. I wouldn't like
to use the word hero, but I have played my part. A load of players have come
and gone, but I've stayed around and enjoyed every minute of it.
If I could pick out my two most memorable moments, the Play-Off final and
the two goals I scored when we beat Manchester United 4-0 in the League Cup
in 2010 are the two that everybody says that I played a blinder in and it
would be fair to say I agree with them.
I have enjoyed every game I have played for West Ham but all good things
have to come to an end and I will be leaving.
When I think of West Ham United I think of a family football club which has
embraced me and I've enjoyed every minute of it.
Thank you all.
Carlton Cole
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Lee looking to build on first team chance WHUFC.com
Elliot Lee wants to build on his first team chance when West Ham United
return to pre-season in late June.
The striker made his second Barclays Premier League appearance for the
Hammers in last Sunday's 2-0 defeat at Newcastle and the experience has left
him hungry for more.
St James' Park is a venue that holds special memories for the 20-year-old,
with Lee having watched his father Rob in action for the Magpies there, so
he was thrilled to follow in his footsteps.
"It was quite an experience for me, and an emotional one too," he explained.
"I grew up watching my dad at Newcastle and the Club posted a picture on
their Twitter of me pointing out where I used to sit in a box with the
Shearer family.
"I was delighted to get on the pitch and I'd like to give a special mention
to Ian Hendon. I've worked with him for quite a few years and he was pushing
for me this year. I think he had a big hand in why I got on so thank you to
him for that, but I'm disappointed that we didn't get a result.
"Most of my family actually went on holiday to Turkey the day before the
game, but I'm sure they watched it out there. My brother and a few of his
pals came along though, and I had text messages from some of my old friends
up there saying don't score!
"It was a great experience – I made my debut at Old Trafford and I said then
the second best place to come on would be St James' or Upton Park. It wasn't
a great result for the team but we'll push on from here and go again next
season."
Lee scored three goals in eleven games on loan at Luton Town before
returning to the first team fold with the Hammers and he was happy to learn
with the Hatters.
He added: "I went out on loan to toughen me up. I experienced playing men's
football and that helped me this season. I came back and have been involved
with the first team squad, so that's great.
"I want to push on from here. We've got the Europa League next year and
hopefully I can be involved in that quite a lot.
"It's important not to get frustrated as a young player because you're
competing with some very good players in the first team, so now I'm going to
keep going in training and hopefully come back and really challenge for a
first team place."
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Young Hammers set for Hong Kong Sevens
WHUFC.com
A young West Ham United team will head to Hong Kong for the HKFC Citibank
Soccer Sevens tournament, which kicks-off on Saturday.
Mark Phillips and his Hammers squad jetted off to the far east earlier this
week to prepare for his prestigious competition, which brings together elite
teams from across Europe and Asia.
Sixteen teams will do battle in the main category, with West Ham drawn in a
group alongside Chinese outfit Shanghai SIPG and local sides Kitchee and
Hong Kong FC Captain's Select.
The group phase will be played out on the opening day, before the Sunday
sees all 16 teams compete in Cup or Plate competitions, depending on their
success in the initial round.
West Ham's squad includes several players who have impressed at U18 and U21
levels this term, with Jordan Brown and Djair Parfitt-Williams leading the
line up front.
Also headed out to Hong Kong are goalkeeper Clarke Bogard, defenders Alex
Pike and Josh Pask, midfielders Marcus Browne, Noha Sylvestre and forwards
Jaanai Gordon, Oscar Borg and Grady Diangana.
U18s coach Mark Phillips is expecting his players to benefit greatly from
the experience.
He told whufc.com: "It's an excellent tournament for the boys to end the
season with. Ian Hendon has taken teams out there twice before and he's
spoken highly of the competition.
"We're the youngest team there, with a few senior and U21s sides there, so
it will provide the players with an invaluable experience.
"It's all a learning curve towards the first team, so dealing with that
challenge, as well as the heat and humidity here will be great.
"I've watched clips from last year's tournament and there's a lot of
athleticism, so we've brought a fit squad with a lot of attacking talent."
You can follow the Hammers' progress throughout the weekend here on
whufc.com
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West Ham striker Carlton Cole to leave club in summer BBC.co.uk
Striker Carlton Cole will leave West Ham this summer when his contract
expires on 30 June.
The 31-year-old, who initially left the Hammers in 2013 before re-signing
five months later, scored 68 goals in 293 appearances after first joining
from Chelsea in 2006.
Veteran goalkeeper Jussi Jaaskelainen, defender Guy Demel and midfielder
Nene have also not been retained.
"It means a lot to me to have been at West Ham for so long," said Cole.
"I wouldn't like to use the word hero, but I have played my part.
"A load of players have come and gone, but I've stayed around and enjoyed
every minute of it."
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Bielsa rumours have Twitter all of a flutter KUMB.com
Filed: Friday, 29th May 2015
By: Staff Writer
Twitter was awash with rumours tonight that Marcelo Bielsa had agreed to
join West Ham - only for it later to be revealed as a hoax from across the
Channel.
The Marseille manager has been strongly linked with the vacant position at
the Boleyn Ground - something that French fans appear to have taken umbrage
to.
e-West Ham @e_westham
BREAKING: According to L'Equipe, Marcelo Bielsa is set to leave Marseille
and become the next West Ham manager.
12:03 AM - 29 May 2015
For late on Thursday night rumours began circulating that respected French
broadcaster L'Equipe had reported Bielsa was on his way to the Premier
League having rejected the offer of a new contract from Marseille.
That had Hammers fans gossiping wildly at the prospect of the 59-year-old
Argentine arriving in east London - only to discover some time later that
the whole thing had been a hoax.
Get French Football @GFN_France
Absolutely nothing from L'Équipe or OM TV suggesting that Marcelo Bielsa has
decided to join West Ham. Pure fabrication.
12:45 AM - 29 May 2015
Although contact is understood to have been made between West Ham and
representatives of Bielsa, reports on Thursday morning suggested that he was
close to agreeing a two-year contract extension with his current club.
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Benitez leaves Napoli, set to snub Hammers KUMB.com
Filed: Thursday, 28th May 2015
By: Staff Writer
West Ham managerial target Rafa Benitez has confirmed that he will leave
Napoli at the end of the season.
However the Spanish boss, who has topped West Ham's wish-list for some
considerable time looks set to snub the Hammers and re-join former club Real
Madrid.
According to Real director Josep Pedrerol, Benitez will be unveiled as the
successor to the recently-departed Carlo Ancelotti next Wednesday at 1pm.
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Aaron Cresswell named KUMB Readers' Player of the Year KUMB.com
Filed: Thursday, 28th May 2015
By: Staff Writer
Aaron Cresswell has been named West Ham United's Player of the Year by the
readers of KUMB.com.
The full back - who was recently crowned Hammer of the Year - capped a
superb season by taking the main award in tonight 18th annual KUMB Awards,
staged at The Cow in Stratford Westfield.
And there was further good news for the full-back when he was named Best
Signing, narrowly beating Diafra Sakho into second place.
The other player to pick up two awards on the night was one no longer with
us - Jack Collison, who won the Most Missed award whilst also being named
the KUMB Podcast Guest of the Year.
The full list of winners on the night - which was hosted by Chris Scull and
James Longman from the KUMB Podcast and featured guests Jimmy Walker and
Rufus Brevett (above) - were as follows:
KUMB Awards XVIII: The Winners
PLAYER OF THE YEAR
Aaron Cresswell (44%)
YOUNG PLAYER OF THE YEAR
Reece Burke (92%)
BEST SIGNING
Aaron Cresswell (45%)
MOST IMPROVED PLAYER
Stewart Downing (41%)
GOAL OF THE SEASON
15 September 2014: Enner Valencia vs Hull City a, 2-2 (61%)
MOST MEMORABLE MATCH
20 September 2014: West Ham Utd 3-1 Liverpool (36%)
MOST MISSED
Jack Collison (36%)
PODCAST GUEST OF THE YEAR
Jack Collison (20%)
WORST PLAYER
Kevin Nolan (31%)
WORST SIGNING
Mauro Zarate (63%)
GREATEST DISAPPOINTMENT
The post-Christmas slump in form (61%)
HACKETT OF THE YEAR
The thieves who stole Kenny Brown's medals (29%)
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Carlton Cole announces his departure from West Ham Last Updated: 28/05/15
6:43pm SSN
Carlton Cole has confirmed that he has been released by West Ham for a
second time.
The 31-year-old striker was let go by the Hammers at the end of the 2013
season, only to return to Upton Park a few months later.
He scored three goals in 26 appearances in all competitions last season but
will now be on the lookout for a new club.
He tweeted: "Looking forward to my next adventure. I have spoken to West Ham
United and it has been decide not to extend my contract.
"I wish West Ham United all the best and I will look out for their progress
in the future. Thanks for a great 9 years. it's been emotional."
Cole later wrote a letter saying goodbye to Hammers fans, published on their
official website,
"I've been at West Ham United for quite a long time and I've enjoyed myself
here, with all the ups and downs, the heartaches and everything that came
along with it," he said.
"At the same time, I've grown from being a boy to a man here and everybody
has treated me like a part of the family.
"It is heart-warming to know that I have got such support and that I have
done my fair share for the club and been part of the history as well, which
is very important for me.
"I'm very happy to have been a part of it and, wherever my future may lie,
West Ham will always have a special place in my heart.
"It means a lot to me to have been at West Ham for so long. I wouldn't like
to use the word hero, but I have played my part. A load of players have come
and gone, but I've stayed around and enjoyed every minute of it."
Cole was close to leaving West Ham to join West Brom on Deadline Day in
January but the move fell through at the last minute, much to his
frustration.
"I was there doing the medical; then I was back home," he told The Fantasy
Football Club. "It was disappointing as I was going to get some first-team
football.
"At the time I was not happy about it, but it was one of those things and I
had to get on with it."
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SHOULD THEY STAY OR SHOULD THEY GO: THE MIDFIELDERS
By Iain Dale 28 May 2015 at 08:00
West Ham Till I Die
Kevin Nolan
When Kevin Nolan joined us four years ago it was quite a move for him, as we
had just been relegated. Since then he has scored thirty goals in 139
appearances, a much better strike rate than he had at Bolton. However, his
form this year hasn't been so good and it's easy to assume that age has
caught up with him. He's 33 in June. His contract is up and will not be
renewed, I imagine. VERDICT: LET GO
Mark Noble
At the age of 28 Mark Noble is at the height of his powers, with more than
300 games behind him. It would be unthinkable for him to be sold, but
stranger things have happened. A lot depends on the new manager, but for me
he should be the new club captain. VERDICT: KEEP
Alex Song
At Christmas you'd have found it difficult to find anyone who wouldn't have
wanted to keep Alex Song but his form since then has been average to say the
least. He's certainly not worth the £100k a week he is said to command. He
wants to stay in London so a new deal is obviously a possibility but I'd
have thought unlikely. There's no doubt he's a quality player, and I have
enjoyed watching him, but he is consistently inconsistent. VERDICT: HEART
SAYS KEEP, HEAD SAYS FORGET ABOUT HIM
Cheikhou Kouyate
He's been a revelation, and he should be our key midfielder next season.
It's handy that he can help out at centre back too. VERDICT: KEEP
Stewart Downing
A bit like Alex Song, he was excellent in the first half of the season but
his form faded in the second half, especially when he wasn't playing at the
top of a diamond. He scored six goals this season,a big improvement on his
single goal in the previous season. But at 31 you have to wonder how much
longer his pace will last. If we sold him now we'd recoup most of the £6
million we paid for him. VERDICT: SELL
Matt Jarvis
Matt Jarvis cost a whopping £10 million and has never really fulfilled his
early potential. He's only scored 4 goals in 75 appearances, a pathetic
return for a £10 million winger. One wonders if we'd recoup more than thirty
per cent of that. VERDICT: SELL
Morgan Amalfitano
Amalfitano has done well despite not being given a huge number of games. His
great asset is his ability to play out wide or through the centre. VERDICT:
KEEP
Diego Poyet
With Kevin Nolan gone Diego Poyet might break through. He impressed whenever
he played and certainly didn't ever let anyone down. I'd like to see more of
him. VERDICT: KEEP
VERDICT
With Noble and Kouyate first choice players in a midfield three, we need a
top class ballplaying midfielder and another defensive midfield player. I
also think we need more speed on the wings.
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If Marcelo Bielsa did not exist it would probably be necessary to invent him
Barney Ronay West Ham may be in the market for a new manager and would liven
things up considerably by appointing the otherworldly Argentinian from
Marseille Friday 10 April 2015 13.11 BST Last modified on Saturday 11 April
2015 08.54 BST
There was a stir in the art world a few years back when the great "lost"
American painter Nat Tate was dramatically rediscovered. Tate, the story
goes, was a member of the New York scene of the 1950s, who ended up jumping
to his death off the Staten Island ferry after visiting Europe and finding
himself haunted by the genius of Braque and Picasso. The Tate retrospective
opened in London with a speech by David Bowie and a tribute from Gore Vidal,
who knew everybody, so naturally knew Tate too. Critics at the launch nodded
sagely. Tate was obscure – they knew the name, of course – but perhaps it
really was time for a re-evaluation of this strangely overlooked
contemporary of Jackson Pollock and the mid-century greats who ... well ...
didn't actually exist.
Tate, it soon emerged, was an amusing cut and paste hoax by the novelist
William Boyd, in part inspired by his irritation with the hype over the
"Young British Artists" of the times, many of whom were, as Boyd later
noted, "not very good".
The reason for mentioning him here is simply that Tate sometimes pops into
my head whenever the cultishly revered, relentlessly name-checked
Argentinian football coach Marcelo Bielsa is mentioned in some unlikely
passing context, as he was this week with the republishing of a leaked
shortlist of candidates to replace Sam Allardyce at West Ham.
You can imagine the talk around the boardroom table on this one. OK, so who
have we got then? Respected club legend? Slaven Bilic. Tick. Premier League
veteran? Rafa Benítez. Got it. Right, all we're missing now is an eccentric
idealist who values academic process above winning and who once wandered
around for several days wearing a pair of shoes on which he'd drawn an
outline of feet to illustrate some fine point of technique to his players.
Bielsa to West Ham: it's a compelling prospect. But then he's a compelling
kind of guy, a seductive and in many ways very funny giant of the modern
game. Certainly if Bielsa didn't exist it would probably be necessary to
invent him, and there is no doubt his legend has been allowed to develop a
slightly exaggerated, cartoonish edge: the manager as crackpot chess genius,
nerd god, wandering the streets in his carpet slippers in search of some
fleeting glimpse of the footballing absolute.
"There are 36 different forms of communicating through a pass," Bielsa once
said, and you can already feel yourself nodding. Yes! More! So much so it is
even possible to imagine, here in landlocked Premier League-land, Bielsa
himself could turn out to be an elaborate hoax, an in-joke concocted by
South American intellectuals at the expense of lonesome English tactical
romantics everywhere.
Except, of course, unlike Nat Tate, Bielsa is real and currently working in
France. This week, as the West Ham link flickered in the background, a video
emerged of him addressing his Marseille team after their 0-0 draw with Lyon
last month. It shows Bielsa giving a beautiful, slightly maniacal speech
about collectivism and team endeavour that drew applause from his players
and provides above all a reminder of his allure, the sense of someone oddly
untouched and otherworldly, concerned solely with method and form.
And what methods they are. At Athletic Bilbao Bielsa produced an array of
impenetrable diagrams, cool green Rothko squares decorated with gloops of
colour, angry squiggles, cartoon hieroglyphs illustrating how his player
should always be in motion. "Running is understanding, running is
everything," he has said, and his teams do run, pushing forward always –
defence is simply the first stage of attack – and resembling at times a kind
of wired, luminous, footballing modern jazz.
In this sense Bielsa isn't Jack Kerouac, the star turn, the headline act. He
is instead the Neal Cassady of modern football: the pure idealist, the guy
who inspired the guys, and from whom so many managers have borrowed a
little, from the more diffuse to to outright acolytes such as Pep Guardiola
or Chile manager Jorge Sampaoli, who used to listen to Bielsa speeches on a
walkman while he went out jogging.
So: West Ham then. It probably won't happen. But wouldn't it be great?
Firstly for that rare thing, a genuine clash of cultures: football's great
professorial puritan at work in its most cheerfully philistine league.
Bielsa is a guaranteed provocation for those who like to see English
football as an unmasker of artifice and pretension, and in which even Louis
van Gaal – who could, frankly, dine out for ever just on that transformative
Ajax team of the mid-1990s – was being fitted up earlier this season as
another empty professor, another Josef Venglos, another Nat Tate.
In which case wait until they get a load of Bielsa, whose reputation as a
modern great rests on intangible moments of tactical innovation, who doesn't
win trophies and whose teams have often enjoyed intoxicating peaks matched
with sudden dips, in part because he appears at times to be asking his
players to do something impossible, to sustain some personal vision of
sublime unceasing movement.
Bielsa to West Ham remains an unlikely dream. But take a step back and there
is a case to be made here. West Ham's fans demand attacking, progressive
football, which is pretty much all Bielsa is interested in. The current
owners seem to want a long-term plan and Bielsa is all about plans. This is
a club that has traditionally allowed its mangers to settle and which also
isn't afraid of a certain academic intensity, from Malcolm Allison and the
Cafe Cassettari set, with their tactical arguments over the squeeze ketchup
bottle; to Ron Greenwood – in his own way a kind of homespun proto-Bielsa, –
the tracksuit obsessive with his Hungarian fixation, his endless hours on
the training pitch before eventually being dragged off in a daze still
muttering about plans and formulae.
Above all it would simply be great fun and a deliciously counter-intuitive
move for the league that doesn't think, the league that likes instead to
bump along in a state of profitable stasis. And which is perhaps missing a
little intellectual content to go with the generalised excitement, a
different kind of passion beyond the familiar operetta.
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Jussi, Cole, Demel & Nene leave West Ham Posted by Sean Whetstone on May 28,
2015 in Whispers C AND H
West Ham have officially confirmed that first team squad players Carlton
Cole, Guy Demel, Jussi Jaaskelainen and Nene will all leave the Club at the
end of their contracts on 30th June.
The release of these senior players will free up around £125,000 per week of
wages which is £6.5m per season off the wage bill. Although not mentioned
Loanee Alex Song is expected to save another £75,000 per week in wages after
his loan ended.
Young Academy players Kieran Bywater, Sean Maguire, Paul McCallum and Dan
Potts will also depart the Boleyn Ground after not being offered new
contracts. Hammers scholars Jerry Amoo and Kieran Bailey have been released,
while Taylor Tombides will also be moving on.
Released Under 16 Academy players include Nathan Parsons, Tom Carlton,
Keagan Cole, Nathan Douglas, Matthew Campbell, Billy Holmes and Louis Yuill.
Yuill has joined Birmingham youth while Campbell has joined Millwall youth
setup.
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Official: Hendo becomes O's manager
Posted by Sean Whetstone on May 29, 2015 in Whispers C AND H
Leyton Orient have appointed West Ham first team coach Ian Hendon as their
new manager.
Hendon, 43, who played more than 150 times for Orient, takes up his new role
on 1 July.
"Orient is a Club that means a great deal to me – I hope that fans will
remember the commitment I showed as a player, and know they can expect the
same dedication from me as Head Coach," Hendo told www.leytonorient.com
"I've got a lot of experience of the lower leagues, having played at every
level during my career and worked in League Two as player/manager, but
having spent a few years working in the Premier League I have learnt a huge
amount that will stand me in good stead for this new challenge."
"I hope to be able to bring some stability to the Club and help rebuild
after the disappointment of last season. Promotion is the priority, but
reconnecting with the fans is also important. Having met the President, I
was impressed with his own long-term plans for the Club, and I can't wait to
get started."
Hendo's Orient will be playing Teddy Sheringham's Stevenage in league
division two after the O's was relegated this season.
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Lille midfielder interest by Hammers
Posted by Sean Whetstone on May 28, 2015 in Whispers C AND H
According to reports in the media West Ham have enquired about £7m-rated
Lille midfielder Idrissa Gueye.
The Senegalese international is also being tracked by Southampton and
Crystal Palace but is wanted by several teams in France. Gueye, 25, made 39
appearances for Lille this season but was told last summer he could leave
the French club.
Without a manager in place, Director of recruitment Tony Henry is thought to
scouting a number of West Ham targets to hit the ground running in the
Summer transfer market once a manager is finally appointed.
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Potts farewell to Hammers
Posted by Sean Whetstone on May 28, 2015 in Whispers C AND H
West Ham youngster Danny Potts has penned an emotional farewell to the club,
staff and Hammers fans following his release from the club he spent 12 years
at:
"An extremely emotional & difficult day personally in which there is no
creditable way to sum up what West Ham United has done for me over the past
12 years. From the staff & players to the fans that have supported me
through dark times and the very best of times I will be forever grateful.
The club has taught me so much not only as a player on the pitch but a
person off it. I will never forget my time at West Ham and want to wish the
club and the people associated nothing but the best for the forthcoming
seasons & hopefully give the fans the success they deserve! I look forward
to what challenges and opportunities await me and with that I am excited for
what the future holds for myself. It's been an absolute privilege & honour
to have been able to represent the club that means so much to me and there
are no words that will justify it all! Thank You WHUFC!"
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West Ham U21 Relegated
Posted by Sean Whetstone on May 28, 2015 in Whispers C AND H
West Ham have been relegated from the Barclays U21 Premier League division 1
after finishing rock bottom of the table.
The West Ham youngsters achieved just 5 wins and 17 points during their 22
games season. They now face a season in the U21 division 2.
The Barclays U21 Premier League replaced the Premier Reserve League at the
start of the 2012/13 season. There are 24 clubs entered, of which 15 are
from the Barclays Premier League and nine are from the Championship. The 24
clubs play in two 12-team divisions from the 2014/15 campaign. The teams in
11th and 12th in the division 1 will be relegated, while Division's top 2
will be promoted. West Ham finished in 12th place with a goal difference of
-23 this season while fellow strugglers Fulham were also relegated on 22
points. Middlesborough and Reading have been promoted to division 1.
Head of player development Terry Westley is looking to completely rebuild
the West Ham Academy in an attempt to get a return on the £4m the board
invest each year. A large number players have been released in recent months
and today saw another batch of players released who Westley believes can not
make the grade, this included the son of his U21 manager, Dan Potts.
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Released West Ham players find clubs
Posted by Sean Whetstone on May 28, 2015 in Whispers C AND H
According to a website dedicated to West Ham youth whufcyouth.wordpress.com
many of today's Academy youth players released by the club have new clubs
lined up.
Taylor Tombides looks like he is set to join Hull City, Danny Potts has been
linked with a move to Luton Town, Sean Maguire has been linked with a move
Accrington Stanley, Jerry Amoo is training with Reading and Kieran Bailey
has joined Colchester.
Head of Player Development, Terry Westley continues to clear out the Academy
built by Tony Carr and Nick Haycock. Westley took over the Academy last
Summer with Steve Potts now in place as the Under 21 manager. It is
understood Westley has been tasked by the board with getting a return on the
£4m plus investment made into the Academy every year.
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Martin: 'Club needs grabbing by scruff of the neck'
Posted by Sean Whetstone on May 28, 2015 in Whispers C AND H
Alvin Marin has delivered his verdict on the state of the club and reckons
someone needs to take it by the scruff of the neck.
The talkSport presenter declared: "This is a very delicate and complex
situation at West Ham. It's not open and shut.
"There are a lot of West Ham fans who were 50/50 whether they liked him or
they didn't like him. (Sam Allardyce).
"When I'm asked about it, it's not just about was it right to make a change?
It's what was the alternative? – If they didn't make a change, they had to
offer him a new contract; what terms would it be on?"
"No one can argue that Allardyce doesn't have plenty of Premier League
experience and a CV to do well at any club around a mid-table sort of level.
"However, West Ham now have the tools to be much more than that and they
will be looking to progress domestically next season and to make the most of
their gifted position in the Europa League.
"Someone needs to grab the club by the scruff of the neck and the board
clearly didn't feel that Allardyce was worth the financial gambled, weighed
against those pressures for the club to improve.
"Whether it turns out to be the right decision remains to be seen, but the
new man coming in has a real opportunity to create something special by the
time of the club's move to the Olympic Stadium."
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An open letter from Carlton Cole
Posted by Sean Whetstone on May 28, 2015 in Whispers C AND H
Hello everyone,
I've been at West Ham United for quite a long time and I've enjoyed myself
here, with all the ups and downs, the heartaches and everything that came
along with it.
At the same time, I've grown from being a boy to a man here and everybody
has treated me like a part of the family.
It is heart-warming to know that I have got such support and that I have
done my fair share for the Club and been part of the history as well, which
is very important for me.
I'm very happy to have been a part of it and, wherever my future may lie,
West Ham will always have a special place in my heart.
It means a lot to me to have been at West Ham for so long. I wouldn't like
to use the word hero, but I have played my part. A load of players have come
and gone, but I've stayed around and enjoyed every minute of it.
If I could pick out my two most memorable moments, the Play-Off final and
the two goals I scored when we beat Manchester United 4-0 in the League Cup
in 2010 are the two that everybody says that I played a blinder in and it
would be fair to say I agree with them.
I have enjoyed every game I have played for West Ham but all good things
have to come to an end and I will be leaving.
When I think of West Ham United I think of a family football club which has
embraced me and I've enjoyed every minute of it.
Thank you all.
Carlton Cole
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http://vyperz.blogspot.com
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